CASUAL 60: Goblin Entity

Here at Major Spoilers we strive to bring you the best in comics coverage and analysis. Also the best in random Magic: The Gathering Decks I come up with…

GOBLIN ATTACK!

Magic 2013 is right around the corner and we’re already seeing preview card spoilers. Today we’re going to look at a deck featuring Krenko, Mob Boss (a spanking new card) along with one of my favorite cards of all time: Mirror Entity.
Check it:

NO ONE HERE BUT US GOBLINS

At first glance you might be a bit confused. Why is Knight Exemplar here? What’s with the thopters? But take another look, it all clicks together with the glory that is Mirror Entity. That’s right, Mirror Entity turns your knights into goblins, your goblins into soldiers and your thopters into knights. The best part is that there’s no tapping required, and since half the creatures in the deck provide static bonuses you can pay 0 mana and still have beefy, indestructible, hasty vigilant beaters.

KRENKO IN THE HOUSE

Krenko is the card that puts this deck over the top. Pay any number of mana to mirror entity and suddenly Krenko brings a little goblin squire for all your knight exemplars, a little goblin pilot for your ornithopters and a goblin medium for your spirit tokens. Not to mention that with a goblin chieftain on the field Krenko can call up his little token mobsters the moment he hits the table.

Speaking of Tokens, this deck makes a lot of them, and Midnight Haunting’s flying spookies will end games in a heartbeat if Mirror Entity’s around. I threw in some Dawn Charms for added protection and some Flame Slash action to clear the field for your attacking ghostgoblinknights.

Also of note are the basic landcyclers. This deck wants to generate as much mana as possible and these were the best options without resorting to one-shot spells like Seething Song and its ilk.

SHAKE IT UP

This deck is very easy to alter; for one, you can trade out any lord for any other lord of the same color, say a Sunrise Sovereign if you’re feeling brave. Adding other colors would majorly change the way the deck plays (but not in a bad way). A Captivating Vampire in black, or a Lord of the Unreal in blue would cause your opponents all kinds of headaches. Lastly, you can always add planeswalkers. Any version of Elspeth can make you more tokens and Chandra, The Firebrand can double each shot of your token-making spells.

Hopefully you enjoyed taking a look at this deck. If you guys get a chance to try it out at some point let me know. I’d love to hear how it went.

The Author

Rodrigo

Nobody really knows what Rodrigo's deal is. He is a perpetual enigma, an unknown quantity, the X factor. He's the new kid in school, the unlisted number, the person all your friends talk about, but you've never met. How can one person be so mysterious, you ask? THAT IS ALSO TOTALLY A MYSTERY! You can try to keep tabs on him on twitter by following @fearsomecritter, but that probably won't help.

4 Comments

Hey Rodrigo,
Looks pretty cool. Might be nice to add in some Goblin War Strikes, Gempalm Incinerator, or Goblin Bombardment, so you can put the goblins to use without needing to attack.
I built a deck like this, but your deck is much more efficient – I was using Brightstone Ritual combined with Warbeak Trumpeters to produce goblins, and as such couldn’t afford to double very often.